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Can the University of California help answer our climate problems?

After a two-day climate summit at the University of California San Diego, university leaders say the school's 10 campuses can serve as role models for the rest of the world.

Lenny Ignelzi/AP

Janet Napolitano, the President of the University of California, speaks at Carbon Neutrality Initiative at the University of California-San Diego Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2015, in San Diego. Napolitano said reducing the human carbon footprint is a "moral imperative" and vows to turn the system's 10 campuses into a living laboratory for solutions.

The University of California (UC) renewed its commitment to fight climate change at the UC Carbon and Climate Neutrality Summit at UC San Diego Tuesday. University president Janet Napolitano assured California Gov. Jerry Brown and other summit participants that the university’s 10 campuses will continue to act as “living laboratories” for climate change solutions.

“Addressing these challenges, and reducing our carbon footprint, is a moral imperative,” Ms. Napolitano, a former governor of Arizona and Homeland Security secretary, said at the summit.

Through the Carbon Neutrality Initiative, announced by Napolitano in 2013, UC is committed to making all buildings and vehicles associated with its 10 campuses carbon neutral by 2025. To successfully emit net zero greenhouse gases in 10 years, the University of California will primarily focus on energy and food waste.

Dr. Ram Ramanathan, a distinguished professor at Scripps Institute of Oceanography at UC San Diego and chair of the UC Summit, tells The Christian Science Monitor that the goal of the two-day summit was to address “scalable solutions” to the global problem of climate change.

“The summit asked, how do we take the knowledge created on this campus to the rest of the world? How do we get this knowledge into action for the rest of the planet?” says Dr. Ramanathan.

The answer? Ramanathan says everybody else should follow by example because with 10 campuses and over half a million students, the university is practically “its own city-state.” So although Ramanathan acknowledges that you “can’t just take what’s done in a university and transport it everywhere else,” UC’s serious emission cuts have been quick, cheap and easy.

“We are saying no, no, no. It is not just theory, it is done,” Ramanathan explains. “That’s the message people need to hear. This is the way of the future.”

UC San Diego generates 95 percent of its own power, UC Irvine gets hydrogen power from sewage, and UC Berkeley has cut down on power consumption by using smart sensors.

And at the state level, Gov. Brown has pushed for uncompromising climate initiatives. Most recently, Brown signed a climate-change bill earlier this month that aims to double energy efficiency in homes and offices, generate half of the state’s electricity from renewable sources such as solar and wind by 2030, and cut the state’s gasoline use in half.

“This is big,” Brown said when signing the climate change bill. “It is big because it is global in scope, but it is also big because it is local in application.”

“While California is not a planet, it’s still a global leader,” said Brown at the summit. “And what we do will not be disseminated.”

So, the University of California might stand alone now among universities with its neutrality goal. But the school's leaders believe they are paving the way to the future.

“I anticipate that by 2025, when the University of California is carbon neutral, that the rest of the world in seeking climate solutions will say, ‘Well, let’s go back to 2015 when they had that summit at UC San Diego and let’s see if we can do what the University of California did,” said Napolitano.

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